Books

Oh, hello...

Oh, hello.

I haven't seen you in (counting on fingers) six months.

Wow.

There's been a lot of living goin' on these past six months.

I started a new job. It's one of the toughest and steepest learning curves I've experienced and probably one of the best decisions I've made in a long time. There's so much to say about this shift in my life that it's overwhelming to think about it. I feel it will be its own blog post. Much to process there...

I wrote my first term paper in over 20 years and aced a university course on social communications. Woot!

After 20 years I dipped my toes into university life. It was an enlightening and expansive experience on many fronts.

After 20 years I dipped my toes into university life. It was an enlightening and expansive experience on many fronts.

I read The Desire Map, by Danielle LaPorte. It feels like a game changer. At least I think it does. I'll let you know in a few months.

I watched a lot of The Waltons and a lot of Little House on the Prairie (LHOTP). I bought the LHOTP box set at Costco, containing all nine seasons. Best. purchase. ever.

I read books. A LOT of books. At least four of them - probably five - were related to personal finance. I'm a nerd.

I'm not lying. There is a stack of four books on personal finance on my coffee table as I type. Cassie looks enthralled, don't you think?

I'm not lying. There is a stack of four books on personal finance on my coffee table as I type. Cassie looks enthralled, don't you think?

I wrote my morning pages and continue to do so. They keep me grounded and clear-headed.

I slept. Goodness, I slept.

I spent 45 hours and 15 pages exploring the "Social Impact of Digitization and Technological Convergence in the Book Industry." Eff I'm proud of that! Did I mention it was the first term paper I wrote in over 20 years?

Once my term paper was submitted, I revelled in having absolutely no weekend plans for at least a month.

I spent a luxurious getaway in Toronto with D. I saw paintings by Cézanne and van Gogh at the Art Gallery of Ontario, wept at the beauty of underwater sea creatures and got my picture taken with the Stanley Cup. I caught up with a friend I hadn't seen in over a year. It was soul-filling.

Did I mention that I started a new job? Did I mention that it was (and still is) a steep learning curve? Did I also mention that for the first time in about 15-20 years I can say that I like my 9-5 job and am not desperate to find a way out? I'm still processing that. This is big. Really big.

I spent time in the studio and painted.

I continued Sketches from the Cube, Flora edition. I think I like it better than the Sketches from the Cube Portraits edition I did earlier last year. More to come on that in another post.

I danced with D. in the kitchen, I made soup. I tracked my finances and started flossing (finally!). I despaired at current events. I escaped in novels and curled up under wool blankets. I snowshoed in the night with friends on New Year's Eve. I baked homemade biscuits and savoured chili made by D. I pieced together jigsaw puzzles and drank tea. I celebrated a birthday. I celebrated a life. I shoveled snow and watched movies and did the laundry. I lived the every day.

Gustav Klimt's The Kiss as a jigsaw puzzle. It was a good one!

Gustav Klimt's The Kiss as a jigsaw puzzle. It was a good one!

All of this, soul-filling.

It seems - term paper and new job excepted - that much of my living has been through seemingly mundane happenings that came and went without fanfare and could easily have been taken for granted.

This seemingly mundane unfolding of things brought me comfort, peace and joy, and I am grateful.

Enough about me.

I bet if you paused and took stock you'd discover that you've done a lot of living these past six months too.

The grand, the mundane, and everything in between.

Why don't you try it? It's easy, just start with "Oh, hello..."

Birthday List Love #4: 25 Books I've Enjoyed This Year (So Far)

Books, books and more books!

Books I’ve bought, books from the library, books on order as I type. Books I’ve read, books waiting to be read, books I’m reading for a second time. Books I sought out, books picked up on a whim. Books that have graced my coffee, bedside and kitchen tables.

All of them have been flipped through, referenced or enjoyed during the past few months.

I chose to go for a round number of 25 books. I also chose to keep it simple: no reviews, just titles, authors and links for your perusal.

Happy reading!

~~~

  1. The Prosperous Heart: Creating a Life of “Enough”, by Julia Cameron with Emma Lively
  2. Soul Shifts: Transformative Wisdom for Creating a Life of Authentic Awakening, Emotional Freedom, and Practical Spirituality, by Dr. Barbara De Angelis
  3. The Art of Possibility: Transforming Professional and Personal Life, by Rosamund Stone Zander and Benjamin Zander
  4. Illuminate: Ignite Changes Through Speeches, Stories, Ceremonies, and Symbols, by Nancy Duarte and Patti Sanchez
  5. slide:ology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations, by Nancy Duarte
  6. The Information Design Handbook, by Jennifer Visocky O’Grady and Ken Visocky O'Grady
  7. Pocket Your Dollars: 5 attitude changes that will help you pay down debt, avoid financial stress & keep more of what you make, by Carrie Rocha
  8. Body of Work: Finding the Thread That Ties Your Story Together, by Pamela Slim
  9. Get the Right Job Right Now: Proven tools, tips and techniques from Canada’s career coach, by Alan Kearns
  10. Big Magic: Creative Living Beyond Fear, by Elizabeth Gilbert
  11. Food Rules: An Eater’s Manual, by Michael Pollan and Maira Kalman
  12. A Beautiful Mess Photo Idea Book: 95 Inspiring Ideas for Photographing Your Friends, Your World, and Yourself, by Elsie Larson and Emma Chapman
  13. Understanding Exposure: How to Shoot Photographs With Any Camera, by Bryan Peterson
  14. Understanding Close-up Photography: Creative Close Encounters with or Without a Macro Lens, by Bryan Peterson
  15. Finding Your Visual Voice: A Painter's Guide to Developing an Artistic Style, by Dakota Mitchell with Lee Haroun
  16. The Women of Beaver Hall: Canadian Modernist Painters, by Evelyn Walters
  17. The Beaver Hall Group: 1920s Modernism in Montreal, by Jacques DesRochers and Kristina Hunneault
  18. Vincent by Himself: A Selection of Van Gogh's Paintings and Drawings Together With Extracts from His Letters, edited by Bruce Bernard
  19. Gustav Klimt: From Drawing to Painting, by Christian M. Nebehay and Renée Nebehay-King
  20. Expressionism, by Norbert Wolf
  21. Witness: Canadian Art of the First World War, by Amber Lloydlangston and Laura Brandon
  22. The Backwoods of Canada, by Catherine Parr Traill (Note: My copy is a 1971 edition picked up at a used book store and has the funkiest cover art. Since I couldn't find it on Amazon, I linked to a version that has a $0,99 Kindle edition.)
  23. Anne Savage: The Story of a Canadian Painter, by Anne McDougall
  24. Les héritiers du fleuve, Tome 1: 1887-1893, by Louise Tremblay-D'Essiambre
  25. The World of Downton Abbey, by Jessica Fellowes and Julian Fellowes

~~~

Previously, on Birthday List Love:

Birthday List Love #1: Favourite Recipes

Birthday List Love #2: Personal Finance Books by Gail Vaz-Oxlade

Birthday List Love #3: Four Female Canadian Artists

List #5 coming up next...